Worries
in sentence
421 examples of Worries in a sentence
Worries
about overvalued currencies permeated policy discussions in many emerging markets as recently as 2013, and sustained efforts to lean against the wind of appreciation resulted in record reserve accumulation for many central banks.
“Why is the world so full of unfairness, with the limelight only splashing on the prettiest spots in the city?” she wonders one night, as she
worries
about her and her sister’s struggle to buy a home.
Not all
worries
about the treaty’s impact are unfounded.
But Japan remains concerned about China’s rapidly modernizing military, while China
worries
about a potential US-Japan containment strategy for China, especially in the case of a crisis in the Taiwan Straits.
Yet 57.5% of Swiss voters opted in a referendum for a constitutional ban on minarets, allegedly because of
worries
about “fundamentalism” and the “creeping Islamization” of Switzerland.
But it is evident that the Trump administration, too,
worries
about keeping up appearances.
First,
worries
about a hard landing in China and its likely impact on the stock market and the value of the renminbi have returned with a vengeance.
Worries
that we are losing forests overlook the reality that as countries become richer, they increase their forest cover.
But, at the very least, President Barack Obama’s declared focus on “nation-building at home” has created a perception of retreat that
worries
many allies.
East Asia’s Patriots and PopulistsTOKYO – When faced with domestic worries, politicians often resort to foreign diversions – a simple axiom that is highly useful in assessing the increasingly tense sovereignty disputes in the East and South China Seas.
Should we still share his
worries?
But it is clearly China, which has the resources to develop a credible anti-access/area-denial strategy, that most
worries
US military planners.
With this and other elements of a disheartening employment report now suddenly raising widespread
worries
about the underlying health and durability of America’s recovery, it is important to understand the positive factors and why they are not enough as yet.
Perhaps the Bush administration
worries
that if oil countries abandoned the dollar standard, today’s dollar weakness would turn into a rout.
Perhaps the administration
worries
that it cannot simultaneously beg for lower dollar oil prices and help promote a weaker dollar.
The adverse short-term growth effects of a spending cut are likely to be largest when the economy is already in a recession, trade partners are also cutting spending or raising taxes, the central bank’s interest rate is already near zero, and markets have no particular
worries
about the state’s ability to repay its debt.
In fact, such
worries
were widespread as far back as the fall of 2013, when I was in Istanbul interviewing business and financial leaders for a BBC Radio series on emerging economies.
Furthermore, oil prices today are subject to a powerful source of downward pressure: the expectation that the world economy will be restructured in response to
worries
about climate change.
And
worries
that falling commodity prices will lead to damaging, 1930s-style deflation are almost certainly overblown.
On the day of the vote, a controversial decision by Turkey’s Supreme Electoral Council concerning the acceptability of ballots that lacked the official stamps on the back heightened
worries
about voting irregularities and cast a shadow on the legitimacy of the result – which is now being strongly, albeit futilely, contested.
A Doomsday ScenarioAs America debates whether or not to invade Iraq, fears that the country's economic recovery will stall are beginning to creep into the discussion; with that,
worries
about the health of the global economy are growing, too.
Moreover, Russia is hinting at the many
worries
within EU countries about potential demands for self-rule, by, for example, the Basques in Spain, the Turks in northern Cyprus, and the large Hungarian minorities in Romania and Slovakia.
The genius of The Limits to Growth was to fuse these
worries
with fears of running out of stuff.
But, however fundamental the current differences might be, it is the underlying suspicion that Obama is poised to shift America away from its unique relationship with the Jewish state that most
worries
Israelis.
There is no economic research that supports such
worries.
To be sure, if Japan's government started printing money recklessly--as some countries have done in the past--such
worries
would be well grounded.
Economic theory tells us that our
worries
are groundless.
China also promised to establish two industrial parks, in Gujarat and Maharashtra, as well as provide greater market access to Indian products, in an effort to allay India’s
worries
over the widening bilateral trade deficit, which has soared from $1 billion in 2001 to more than $40 billion today.
But the Iraq crisis provided East European countries with an opportunity to confirm the absolute priority they place on strategic stability, which is why they put relations with the US ahead of
worries
about European political solidarity.
The concerns range from
worries
about the destabilizing ramifications of an exit strategy from QE to apprehension about capital losses on the Fed’s rapidly ballooning portfolio of securities (currently $3 trillion, and on its way to $4 trillion by the end of this year).
Back
Related words
About
Which
There
Economic
Would
Global
Countries
Their
Could
Other
People
World
Economy
While
Trade
Might
Growth
Country
Should
Least